The opener contributed an unbeaten 60 to put his side well on course to overhaul their opponents' modest 150 for 7 at Taunton when bad light intervened with Essex 106 for 2.

After a short break, the visitors were given a revised target of 125 from 17 overs, which meant they needed 19 from 15 balls. Ravi Bopara hit the first of them for four on his way to 33 not out and Essex breezed home by eight wickets with an over to spare. Jesse Ryder hit 28 at the top of the innings.

Legspinner Max Waller was Somerset's best bowler, with figures of 1 for 22 from four overs. But their seamers erred on the short side as Pettini and Bopara hit five fours apiece and Ryder four fours and a six.

With Hampshire losing to Surrey, victory was enough for Essex to overtake the previous leaders.

Somerset's below-par score was built around a second-wicket stand of 80 in 9.3 overs between in-form duo Craig Kieswetter and Peter Trego after Marcus Trescothick's miserable T20 season continued when he top-edged a pull shot off Graham Napier and was caught at deep midwicket for 16.

Kieswetter's consistency as a run-maker in T20 is incredible. He has only had one score below 37 in his last 15 innings in the domestic competition spread over two seasons. His 40 in this game included two fours and two sixes, one of them a mighty blow over long-on off Bopara that sent the ball out of the ground.

Trego was subdued by his standards, striking four fours before being run-out as he slipped when sent back by Alviro Petersen attempting a single to short fine-leg. Essex never allowed their opponents to break free of the early grip imposed by Napier and David Masters.

Left-arm spinner Tim Phillips was the most economical bowler for the visitors, conceding only 24 from his four overs. Petersen did his best to bolster the total with 26 off 17 balls, but 150 did not look a particularly challenging score.

After the game Essex head coach Paul Grayson said: "Our first target is a top-four finish in the group to reach the quarter-finals. If we can achieve that and push for the top two then great because home advantage and a quarter-final tie at Chelmsford would be very special."

Kieswetter said: "For some reason we are not coming up with the right formula for T20 cricket this season. All the necessary skills are in the squad, but we are not executing them consistently enough. I think the bowlers are doing a good job, but we are not giving them big enough targets to defend."

While the CC campaign has so far been surprisingly good our T20 campaign has been pretty poor by and large,
Looking at the scorecard in this game - and a few others - it seems that Kieswetter actually manages to get set and then gets bogged down when he's in his 30s+. In this game I'm pretty sure we were going at 8+ an over just after the 10 over mark and then regressed.
I'm not sure if Craig is trying to play the anchor role - Trego seemed to be trying similar tactics a few years ago? If so I'd say an anchor role is only likely to be a good tactic if batting on a tricky pitch or if you have someone at the other end who can up the tempo and since Jos has left it has left a huge void in that dept.
Also our bowling by and large has been expensive this year. Nannes is good when he's taking wickets but has had quite a few expensive games. Waller seems to be the only bowler who can consistently give us any control

Android
on June 28, 2014, 20:03 GMT

why somerset is not playing james burke.

John
on June 28, 2014, 7:48 GMT

Oh well , looks like we're out now.

While the CC campaign has so far been surprisingly good our T20 campaign has been pretty poor by and large,
Looking at the scorecard in this game - and a few others - it seems that Kieswetter actually manages to get set and then gets bogged down when he's in his 30s+. In this game I'm pretty sure we were going at 8+ an over just after the 10 over mark and then regressed.
I'm not sure if Craig is trying to play the anchor role - Trego seemed to be trying similar tactics a few years ago? If so I'd say an anchor role is only likely to be a good tactic if batting on a tricky pitch or if you have someone at the other end who can up the tempo and since Jos has left it has left a huge void in that dept.
Also our bowling by and large has been expensive this year. Nannes is good when he's taking wickets but has had quite a few expensive games. Waller seems to be the only bowler who can consistently give us any control

No featured comments at the moment.

John
on June 28, 2014, 7:48 GMT

Oh well , looks like we're out now.

While the CC campaign has so far been surprisingly good our T20 campaign has been pretty poor by and large,
Looking at the scorecard in this game - and a few others - it seems that Kieswetter actually manages to get set and then gets bogged down when he's in his 30s+. In this game I'm pretty sure we were going at 8+ an over just after the 10 over mark and then regressed.
I'm not sure if Craig is trying to play the anchor role - Trego seemed to be trying similar tactics a few years ago? If so I'd say an anchor role is only likely to be a good tactic if batting on a tricky pitch or if you have someone at the other end who can up the tempo and since Jos has left it has left a huge void in that dept.
Also our bowling by and large has been expensive this year. Nannes is good when he's taking wickets but has had quite a few expensive games. Waller seems to be the only bowler who can consistently give us any control

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